1,314 research outputs found

    Remote Navigation and Contact-Force Control of Radiofrequency Ablation Catheters

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    Atrial fibrillation (AF), the most common and clinically significant heart rhythm disorder, is characterized by rapid and irregular electrical activity in the upper chambers resulting in abnormal contractions. Radiofrequency (RF) cardiac catheter ablation is a minimally invasive curative treatment that aims to electrically correct signal pathways inside the atria to restore normal sinus rhythm. Successful catheter ablation requires the complete and permanent elimination of arrhythmogenic signals by delivering transmural RF ablation lesions contiguously near and around key cardiac structures. These procedures are complex and technically challenging and, even when performed by the most skilled physician, nearly half of patients undergo repeat procedures due to incomplete elimination of the arrhythmogenic pathways. This thesis aims to incorporate innovative design to improve catheter stability and maneuverability through the development of robotic platforms that enable precise placement of reproducibly durable ablation lesions. The first part of this thesis deals with the challenges to lesion delivery imposed by cardiorespiratory motion. One of the main determinants of the delivery of durable and transmural RF lesions is the ability to define and maintain a constant contact force between the catheter tip electrode and cardiac tissue, which is hampered by the presence of cardiorespiratory motion. To address this need, I developed and evaluated a novel catheter contact-force control device. The compact electromechanical add-on tool monitors catheter-tissue contact force in real-time and simultaneously adjusts the position of a force-sensing ablation catheter within a steerable sheath to compensate for the change in contact force. In a series of in vitro and in vivo experiments, the contact-force control device demonstrated an ability to: a) maintain an average force to within 1 gram of a set level; b) reduce contact-force variation to below 5 grams (2-8-fold improvement over manual catheter intervention); c) ensure the catheter tip never lost contact with the tissue and never approached dangerous force levels; and importantly, d) deliver reproducible RF ablation lesions regardless of cardiac tissue motion, which were of the same depth and volume as lesions delivered in the absence of tissue motion. In the second part of the thesis, I describe a novel steerable sheath and catheter robotic navigation system, which incorporates the catheter contact-force controller. The robotic platform enables precise and accurate manipulation of a remote conventional steerable sheath and permits catheter-tissue contact-force control. The robotic navigation system was evaluated in vitro using a phantom that combines stationary and moving targets within an in vitro model representing a beating heart. An electrophysiologist used the robotic system to remotely navigate the sheath and catheter tip to select targets and compared the accuracy of reaching these targets performing the same tasks manually. Robotic intervention resulted in significantly higher accuracy and significantly improved the contact-force profile between the catheter tip and moving tissue-mimicking material. Our studies demonstrate that using available contact-force information within a robotic system can ensure precise and accurate placement of reliably transmural RF ablation lesions. These robotic systems can be valuable tools used to optimize RF lesion delivery techniques and ultimately improve clinical outcomes for AF ablation therapy

    Prevalence of haptic feedback in robot-mediated surgery : a systematic review of literature

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    © 2017 Springer-Verlag. This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Journal of Robotic Surgery. The final authenticated version is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11701-017-0763-4With the successful uptake and inclusion of robotic systems in minimally invasive surgery and with the increasing application of robotic surgery (RS) in numerous surgical specialities worldwide, there is now a need to develop and enhance the technology further. One such improvement is the implementation and amalgamation of haptic feedback technology into RS which will permit the operating surgeon on the console to receive haptic information on the type of tissue being operated on. The main advantage of using this is to allow the operating surgeon to feel and control the amount of force applied to different tissues during surgery thus minimising the risk of tissue damage due to both the direct and indirect effects of excessive tissue force or tension being applied during RS. We performed a two-rater systematic review to identify the latest developments and potential avenues of improving technology in the application and implementation of haptic feedback technology to the operating surgeon on the console during RS. This review provides a summary of technological enhancements in RS, considering different stages of work, from proof of concept to cadaver tissue testing, surgery in animals, and finally real implementation in surgical practice. We identify that at the time of this review, while there is a unanimous agreement regarding need for haptic and tactile feedback, there are no solutions or products available that address this need. There is a scope and need for new developments in haptic augmentation for robot-mediated surgery with the aim of improving patient care and robotic surgical technology further.Peer reviewe

    Robot Autonomy for Surgery

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    Autonomous surgery involves having surgical tasks performed by a robot operating under its own will, with partial or no human involvement. There are several important advantages of automation in surgery, which include increasing precision of care due to sub-millimeter robot control, real-time utilization of biosignals for interventional care, improvements to surgical efficiency and execution, and computer-aided guidance under various medical imaging and sensing modalities. While these methods may displace some tasks of surgical teams and individual surgeons, they also present new capabilities in interventions that are too difficult or go beyond the skills of a human. In this chapter, we provide an overview of robot autonomy in commercial use and in research, and present some of the challenges faced in developing autonomous surgical robots

    Advances in imaging for atrial fibrillation ablation.

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    Over the last fifteen years, our understanding of the pathophysiology of atrial fibrillation (AF) has paved the way for ablation to be utilized as an effective treatment option. With the aim of gaining more detailed anatomical representation, advances have been made using various imaging modalities, both before and during the ablation procedure, in planning and execution. Options have flourished from procedural fluoroscopy, electroanatomic mapping systems, preprocedural computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), ultrasound, and combinations of these technologies. Exciting work is underway in an effort to allow the electrophysiologist to assess scar formation in real time. One advantage would be to lessen the learning curve for what are very complex procedures. The hope of these developments is to improve the likelihood of a successful ablation procedure and to allow more patients access to this treatment

    From passive tool holders to microsurgeons: safer, smaller, smarter surgical robots

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    A Survey on the Current Status and Future Challenges Towards Objective Skills Assessment in Endovascular Surgery

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    Minimally-invasive endovascular interventions have evolved rapidly over the past decade, facilitated by breakthroughs in medical imaging and sensing, instrumentation and most recently robotics. Catheter based operations are potentially safer and applicable to a wider patient population due to the reduced comorbidity. As a result endovascular surgery has become the preferred treatment option for conditions previously treated with open surgery and as such the number of patients undergoing endovascular interventions is increasing every year. This fact coupled with a proclivity for reduced working hours, results in a requirement for efficient training and assessment of new surgeons, that deviates from the “see one, do one, teach one” model introduced by William Halsted, so that trainees obtain operational expertise in a shorter period. Developing more objective assessment tools based on quantitative metrics is now a recognised need in interventional training and this manuscript reports the current literature for endovascular skills assessment and the associated emerging technologies. A systematic search was performed on PubMed (MEDLINE), Google Scholar, IEEXplore and known journals using the keywords, “endovascular surgery”, “surgical skills”, “endovascular skills”, “surgical training endovascular” and “catheter skills”. Focusing explicitly on endovascular surgical skills, we group related works into three categories based on the metrics used; structured scales and checklists, simulation-based and motion-based metrics. This review highlights the key findings in each category and also provides suggestions for new research opportunities towards fully objective and automated surgical assessment solutions
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